Fresh routes, never the same twice
No curated trail database. Amble builds your walk from where you stand, every time you tap Generate.
A new circular route every time you step out. Amble generates three fresh walks from your front door — paths over roads, parks over pavement, no two the same.
Most walking apps show you a directory of trails. Amble does something different. Every time you open it, it builds you a new walk that fits the time you've got — 15 minutes, an hour, anywhere in between.
What makes Amble different
No curated trail database. Amble builds your walk from where you stand, every time you tap Generate.
Walking when it's getting dark? Amble highlights well-lit streets so you can plan with confidence.
Put the phone in your pocket. A gentle buzz at 50%, 75%, and the final 100m. Walking doesn't need a screen.
Dog Mode adjusts pace estimates by your dog's size and age. Multi-dog households welcome.
Mid-walk, weather turns, dog tired? One tap and Amble plots the quickest walkable path home.
Rate the routes you love. Amble subtly tunes the next ones — quiet residential, path-rich, near water, however you prefer.
No leaderboards
Strava is for racing. AllTrails is for hiking destinations. Amble is for the walk you take from your front door, alone or with the dog or with whoever's around. No social feed. No "you're 3 minutes slower than last week" guilt. Just a quietly excellent way to find walks you'll enjoy.
Local-first
No tracking pixel. No analytics SDK. No advertising network. We don't measure how often you open the app or which features you use. Optional sign-in lets you back up to the cloud (when launched). Otherwise: it's all on your device, and it stays there.
Built on OpenStreetMap
Every footpath, kissing gate, towpath and tree-lined avenue Amble routes through was mapped by a volunteer. We're standing on the shoulders of OpenStreetMap, the open-data project that quietly underpins half of modern mapping. Routes are fresh because we re-query the live data, every walk.
Why we built it
I kept walking the same routes. Same loop, same junctions, same view. The walking apps I tried were either fitness trackers (which made me feel guilty) or hiking guides (which assumed I'd drive somewhere first). I wanted something that just found me a new walk from where I was, in the time I had. So I built it.
Amble is a small, opinionated app for people who walk because walking is good. The loop planner runs entirely on your device — no server picking your route. Routes prefer paths over roads, parks over concrete, and they take you somewhere new each time.
It's free, no ads, no tracking. If you walk, I hope you like it.
Download the App Store version today. Android is on the way.
Free, no ads, no tracking. Email support@amble.fit for the Android release.